Defendant’s first two assignments of error attack the validity of the warrant upon which he was originally tried and the resulting judgment entered 18 July 1970 because there was no affirmative showing on the record that the defendant entered a plea of guilty* understandingly and voluntarily. The defendant cites
State v. Harris,
Even if a collateral attack on the original judgment were permissible, there is no showing on the record before us that the issue of the voluntariness of the guilty plea was raised at the revocation hearing.
By defendant’s third and fourth assignments of error he contends that he “was not advised of his right to counsel at the hearing to activate his suspended sentence.” It is clear from the record that the same attorney who represented the defendant at the 10 December 1970 trial was present at the revocation hearing in Superior Court on 21 May 1970, and that he made argument on the defendant’s behalf. These assignments of error are overruled.
Defendant also urges on appeal that he “was not properly informed in writing of the solicitor’s intention to pray the court to activate his suspended sentence as required under G.S. 15-200.1.”
Finally, defendant assigns as error the entry of the judgments activating his suspended sentence, alleging that they were not supported by sufficient evidence. The evidence before the court was sufficient to support its conclusion that the defendant had violated the conditions of his suspended sentence and that the sentence should be activated.
Affirmed.
